Agel & Levin v. F. R. Patch Mfg. Co.

77 Vt. 13 | Vt. | 1904

RowBll, C. J.

The case is this, as far as necessary to1 be stated: The plaintiffs, by correspondence, sold to the defendant a car of scrap iron at $18.00 per net ton delivered at Rutland. After shipment but before delivery the defendant *15refused to take the iron at $18.00 per net ton, whereupon the parties verbally altered the contract by fixing the price at $18.00 per gross ton, and thereupon the defendant took the iron and paid for it at the latter price. The plaintiffs now -claim that the alteration was without consideration and void, .and seek to- recover in general assumpsit the difference between the prices.

Some courts hold that a party is not bound to perform his contract, but may break it at will and pay damages; and that, having broken it, if he consents to perform on terms more favorable to himself, he is doing that which he is not legally bound to do, and so there is a sufficient consideration for the other party’s assent to those terms. Other courts hold that a party is bound to perform his contract, and consequently that there is no consideration for the other party’s assent to those terms, unless there is a valid discharge of the -original contract. Harriman, Cont. 70.

But however this may be while the modified contract remains executory, when it is performed by the party in whose favor it was modified, it becomes binding on both parties, and the original contract is thereby discharged, unless it appears that such was not the intention of the parties. Rogers v. Rogers, 139 Mass. 440; Lawrence v. Davey, 28 Vt. 264. It is said in Thurston v. Ludwig, 6 Ohio St. 1, 67 Am. Dec. 328, that there is a class of cases that a written contract may be altered by mere verbal agreement of the parties, which, at its inception, would have no binding force, but when acted upon by the parties till it would work a fraud or an injury to refuse to carry it out, would become binding and effective as a contract.

Even a contract under seal may be discharged by the performance of a subsequent parol agreement. Thus, in *16Munroe v. Perkins, g Pick. 298, 20 Am. Dec. 475, the plaintiff, by an instrument under seal, agreed to erect a building for a price that proved inadequate, and having performed in part, refused to- proceed, whereupon the defendant promised that if he would complete the work he should be paid a reasonable price for his labor and materials, and thereupon he completed the work; and it was held that having completed it on the faith of the new contract, the plaintiff could recover on the strength of it, and that the old contract was mo defence. See, also, Dearborn v. Cross, 7 Cow. 48. In Le Fevre v. Le Fevre, 4 Serg. and Rawle, 241, 8 Am. Dec. 696, parol evidence was admitted to prove an alteration of the course of an aqueduct established by deed. The court said that if the agreement substituting' another spot had not been acted upon, it would not have been- admissible, but as the situation of the parties had been altered by acting upon it, the evidence was. proper; for a party may prove by parol that after signing a written agreement the parties made a verbal agreement varying it, provided the variation had been acted upon and the original agreement cannot be enforced with a fraud upon one party.

In the case at bar the new agreement has'been acted upon by the parties and fully performed by the defendant, and the original agreement cannot now be enforced without injustice to the defendant.

Judgment affirmed, with additional costs.

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